Pak-Yin Chau
University of Hong Kong
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1990
Raymond Liang; Raymond Yung; Edmond Chiu; Pak-Yin Chau; T. K. Chan; Wah-Kit Lam; David Todd
One hundred febrile episodes in 89 neutropenic patients after cytotoxic chemotherapy were randomized to be treated with either ceftazidime or imipenem as initial monotherapy. The clinical characteristics of the two groups of patients were comparable. The response of the fever in patients who received imipenem was significantly better than that in those who received ceftazidime (77 versus 56%, respectively; P = 0.04), especially in those with microbiologically documented infection (81 versus 33%, respectively; P = 0.02). The in vitro susceptibilities and the clinical responses suggested that, with the possible exception of Pseudomonas spp., imipenem was more effective than ceftazidime in treating neutropenic infections caused by both gram-positive and -negative organisms. An additional 23 and 21% of the patients in the ceftazidime and imipenem groups, respectively, responded to the addition of cloxacillin and amikacin following failure of monotherapy. The majority of the treatment failures, relapses, and superinfections were related to resistant infective organisms such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus spp. and Pseudomonas spp. or disseminated fungal infections.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1990
Raymond Liang; Raymond Yung; T. K. Chan; Pak-Yin Chau; Wah-Kit Lam; S.Y. So; David Todd
The efficacy of ofloxacin in preventing infection in neutropenic patients following cytotoxic chemotherapy was evaluated and was compared with that of co-trimoxazole. A total of 102 patients with hematological malignancies were randomly selected to receive either co-trimoxazole or ofloxacin. All patients were monitored for compliance, occurrence of infection, and drug-related side effects. A surveillance culture of a rectal swab was performed regularly. A total of 25 of the 52 patients (48%) who received co-trimoxazole and 11 of the 50 patients (22%) who received ofloxacin developed fever during the study period (P less than 0.025). Gram-negative bacteremia occurred in nine patients in the co-trimoxazole group (17%) but in only one patient (2%) in the ofloxacin group (P less than 0.05). No patient in either group had documented gram-positive bacterial or Pneumocystis carinii infection. Poor performance status was the only identifiable factor associated with an increased incidence of bacteremia. The surveillance study showed that significantly fewer bacterial strains were resistant to ofloxacin than to co-trimoxazole and that acquisition of resistance to co-trimoxazole was more commonly observed than was acquisition of resistance to ofloxacin. Significantly more patients had skin rashes following co-trimoxazole than ofloxacin treatment (P less than 0.05). Ofloxacin was superior to co-trimoxazole in preventing infection in this population of neutropenic patients.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1998
Wei-Kwang Luk; Samson S. Y. Wong; Kwok-Yung Yuen; Pak-Leung Ho; Patrick C. Y. Woo; Rodney A. Lee; J. S. M. Peiris; Pak-Yin Chau
The spectrum of infectious disease (ID) emergencies in hospitalized patients was assessed in a prospective study of 3,626 inpatient ID consultations in a 1,350-bed teaching hospital. ID emergencies, defined by a need or anticipated need for advanced life support or by irreversible organ damage leading to permanent functional loss, were encountered in 175 patients. Infections of the central nervous system (26.3%), cardiovascular system (14.9%), alimentary system (13.1%), and lower respiratory tract (7.4%) and adverse reactions to antimicrobial agents (7.4%) were most common. In 18.9% of the cases, the referring clinicians were unaware of the emergency at the time of referral. Drug reactions (46.1%), severe alimentary and peritoneal infections (32.0%), upper respiratory tract infections (28.6%), and skin and soft-tissue infections (27.3%) were most frequently missed. The emergency ID conditions were not recognized because they had an atypical presentation (51.5%), were not commonly seen in the referring specialty (24.2%), were due to rare organisms (15.2%), or had unusual anatomical sites of involvement (9.1%). A close liaison between clinicians and the ID team is crucial for recognition of ID emergencies at their early stages so that appropriate investigations and management can be instituted expediently, before the occurrence of irreversible damage.
Journal of Hospital Infection | 2015
V.C.C. Cheng; Pak-Yin Chau; W.M. Lee; Sara K.Y. Ho; Doris W.Y. Lee; Simon Y.C. So; Wong Sc; J.W.M. Tai; Ky Yuen
BACKGROUNDnUnlike direct contact with patients body, hand hygiene practice is often neglected by healthcare workers (HCWs) and visitors after contact with patients environment. Contact with hospital environmental items may increase risk of pathogen transmission.nnnAIMnTo enumerate the number of hand-touch contacts by patients, HCWs and visitors with any hospital environmental items.nnnMETHODSnAll contact-episodes between person and item were recorded by direct observation in a six-bed cubicle of acute wards for 33 working days. High-touch and mutual-touch items with high contact frequencies by HCWs, patients, and visitors were analysed.nnnFINDINGSnIn total, 1107 person-episodes with 6144 contact-episodes were observed in 66 observation hours (average: 16.8 person-episodes and 93.1 contact-episodes per hour). Eight of the top 10 high-touch items, including bedside rails, bedside tables, patients bodies, patients files, linen, bed curtains, bed frames, and lockers were mutually touched by HCWs, patients, and visitors. Bedside rails topped the list with 13.6 contact-episodes per hour (mean), followed by bedside tables (12.3 contact-episodes per hour). Using patients body contacts as a reference, it was found that medical staff and nursing staff contacted bedside tables [rate ratio (RR): 1.741, 1.427, respectively] and patients files (RR: 1.358, 1.324, respectively) more than patients bodies, and nursing staff also contacted bedside rails (RR: 1.490) more than patients bodies.nnnCONCLUSIONnPatients surroundings may be links in the transmission of nosocomial infections because many are frequently touched and mutually contacted by HCWs, patients, and visitors. Therefore, the focus of hand hygiene education, environmental disinfection, and other system changes should be enhanced with respect to high-touch and mutual-touch items.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2015
V.C.C. Cheng; Jonathan H. K. Chen; Rosana Ws Poon; W.M. Lee; Simon Y.C. So; Wong Sc; Pak-Yin Chau; Cyril C. Y. Yip; Shuk-Ching Wong; Jasper Fuk-Woo Chan; I. F. N. Hung; Pak-Leung Ho; Kwok-Yung Yuen
An increasing endemicity of multiple-drug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (MRAB) ST457 was noted in Hong Kong. The epidemiology, risk factors, and infection control measures to prevent nosocomial transmission of this epidemic clone were analyzed. A total of 5,058 patients cultured positive with A. baumannii between 1 January 2004 and 30 June 2014 were included, of which 297 (5.9xa0%) had bacteremia. The first case of MRAB bacteremia emerged in 2009, with an incidence that increased from 0.27 (one case) in 2009 to 1.86 (14 cases) per 100,000 patient-days in 2013 (pu2009<u20090.001). With the implementation of strict contact precautions and directly observed hand hygiene in conscious patients immediately before receiving meals and medications in July 2013, the incidence of MRAB bacteremia reduced from its peak to 0.77 (one case) per 100,000 patient-days in the first 6xa0months of 2014 (pu2009<u20090.001). Patients from long-term care facilities for the elderly [odds ratio (OR) 18.6, confidence interval (CI) 2.1–162.4, pu2009=u20090.008] and history of carbapenem (OR 7.0, CI 1.7–28.0, pu2009=u20090.006) and beta-lactam/beta-lactamase use (OR 5.6, CI 1.1–28.7, pu2009=u20090.038) 90xa0days prior to admission were independent risk factors for MRAB bacteremia by logistic regression when compared with carbapenem-susceptible A. baumannii bacteremia.
European Respiratory Journal | 2005
Pak-Leung Ho; Pak-Yin Chau; Paul S. F. Yip; G.C. Ooi; Pl Khong; James Chung-Man Ho; Pc Wong; Ko C; C Yan; Kwt Tsang
A prospective study was undertaken to identify clinical, radiographical, haematological and biochemical profiles of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) patients. A prediction rule, which demarcates low from high risk patients for SARS in an outbreak situation was developed. A total of 295 patients with unexplained respiratory illnesses, admitted to Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong SAR, China, in March to July 2003, were evaluated for clinical, radiological, haematological and alanine transaminase (ALT) data daily for 3 days after hospitalisation. In total, 44 cases were subsequently confirmed to have SARS by RT-PCR (68.2%) and serology (100%). The scoring system of attributing 11, 10, 3, 3 and 3 points to the presence of independent risk factors, namely: epidemiological link, radiographical deterioration, myalgia, lymphopenia and elevated ALT respectively, generated high and low-risk (total score 11–30 and 0–10, respectively) groups for SARS. The sensitivity and specificity of this prediction rule in positively identifying a SARS patient were 97.7 and 81.3%, respectively. The positive and negative predictive values were 47.8 and 99.5%, respectively. The prediction rule appears to be helpful in assessing suspected patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome at the bedside, and should be further validated in other severe acute respiratory syndrome cohorts.
American Journal of Infection Control | 2016
Vincent C. C. Cheng; Josepha W. M. Tai; W.S. Li; Pak-Yin Chau; Simon Y.C. So; Lisa M.W. Wong; Radley H.C. Ching; Modissa M.L. Ng; Sara K.Y. Ho; Doris W.Y. Lee; W.M. Lee; Sally C. Y. Wong; Ky Yuen
BACKGROUNDnThe importance of compliance with hand hygiene by patients is increasingly recognized to prevent health care-associated infections.nnnMETHODSnThis descriptive study observed the effects of an education campaign, targeted to increase patients self-initiated hand hygiene, and a hand hygiene ambassador-initiated directly observed hand hygiene program on patients hand hygiene compliance in a university-affiliated hospital.nnnRESULTSnThe overall audited compliance of patients self-initiated hand hygiene was only 37.5%, with a rate of 26.9% (112/416 episodes) before meals and medications, 27.5% (19/69 episodes) after using a urinal or bedpan, and 89.7% (87/97 episodes) after attending toilet facilities. Patients referred from a residential care home for older adults had significantly lower hand hygiene compliance (Pu2009=u2009.007). Comparatively, the overall audited compliance of ambassador-initiated directly observed hand hygiene was 97.3% (428/440 episodes), which was significantly higher than patients self-initiated hand hygiene via a patient education program (37.5%, 218/582 episodes, Pu2009<u2009.001).nnnCONCLUSIONSnDirectly observed hand hygiene can play an important role in improving compliance with hand hygiene by hospitalized patients.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2015
V.C.C. Cheng; Jonathan H. K. Chen; Simon Y.C. So; Wong Sc; Mei-Kum Yan; Pak-Yin Chau; W.M. Lee; Kelvin K. W. To; Jasper Fuk-Woo Chan; I. F. N. Hung; Pak-Leung Ho; Ky Yuen
Gastrointestinal colonization by carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB) and multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (MRAB) provides an important reservoir for clinical infections and hospital outbreaks. We conducted a 7-month study in a 3200-bed healthcare network to investigate the prevalence of gastrointestinal colonization of CRAB and MRAB in Hong Kong. Between 1 June and 31 December 2014, a total of 17,760 fecal specimens from 9469 patients were screened. Testing showed that 340 (1.9xa0%) specimens from 224 (2.6xa0%) patients were CRAB-positive, which included 70 (0.39xa0%) MRAB-positive specimens from 54 (0.57xa0%) patients. The presence of wound or ulcer, use of broad-spectrum antibiotics in the preceding 6xa0months, and residence in elderly homes are independent risk factors for gastrointestinal colonization of CRAB. Quantitative bacterial counts in various body sites (rectal, nasal, axilla, wound, catheterized urine, if available) were performed in 33 (61.1xa0%) of 54 MRAB patients. Ten (30.3xa0%) and 8 (24.2xa0%) patients had high bacterial load (defined as over 3 log10) in rectal and nasal swabs, with a median of 5.04 log10 cfu/ml of rectal swab and 4.89 log10 cfu/ml of nasal swab in saline diluent, respectively. Nine (81.8xa0%) of 11 patients with wounds had high bacterial load in wound swabs, with a median of 5.62 log10 cfu/ml. Use of fluoroquinolones 6xa0months before admission was the only significant factor associated with high bacterial load in nasal and rectal swabs. With the implementation of directly observed hand hygiene before meals and medications to all conscious hospitalized patients, no hospital outbreaks were observed during our study period.
American Journal of Infection Control | 2016
Vincent C. C. Cheng; Josepha W. M. Tai; Pak-Yin Chau; Christopher Kc Lai; Vivien W.M. Chuang; Simon Y.C. So; Sally C. Y. Wong; Jonathan H. K. Chen; Pak-Leung Ho; Dominic N. C. Tsang; Ky Yuen
With the emergence of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) in our public hospitals, territory-wide implementation of directly observed hand hygiene before meals and medications for all conscious hospitalized patients reverted the rising VRE incidence of 16.5% per month (Pu2009<u2009.001) to a reduction of -9.8% per month (Pu2009<u2009.001). The outbreak rate reverted from an increasing trend of 10.5% per month (Pu2009<u2009.001) to a decreasing trend of -13.3% per month (Pu2009<u2009.001) between January 2011 and October 2015.
The American review of respiratory disease | 1985
Shun-Yang So; Pak-Yin Chau; Brian M. Jones; Pui-Chee Wu; Kin-Kee Pun; Wah-Kit Lam; J.W.M. Lawton